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Intro

graphql-dataloader-mongoose is a DataLoader generator library that creates a new DataLoader based on an existing Mongoose model with a single line of code!

Installation

npm install graphql-dataloader-mongoose

Getting Started

Step 1 : Create a new MongooseDataloaderFactory

var DataLoader = require('graphql-dataloader-mongoose')

var dataloaderFactory = new MongooseDataloaderFactory();

Start by creating a new MongooseDataloaderFactory. MongooseDataloaderFactory can create a Mongoose DataLoader instance dynamically while the application is running. The instance can then create any DataLoader related to a designated Mongoose model (to be explained in detail below).

Step 2 : Create Mongoose Model DataLoader

For example, here is a Mongoose model representing a User collection in a MongoDB instance.

var UserModel = mongoose.model('User', new Schema({ userId: String, name: String})

You can create a DataLoader which can fetch user data by a userId key.

var userIdDataloader = dataloaderFactory.mongooseLoader(UserModel).dataloader('userId');

Let's see how it works in detail!

Mongoose Model Dataloader

We create a Mongoose DataLoader instance by passing UserModel into dataloaderFactory.mongooseLoader(). Then, we can create any DataLoader derived from the UserModel key.

var userMongooseDataloader = dataloaderFactory.mongooseLoader(UserModel);

DataLoader

To use a DataLoader which selects data using the userId key, all you need to do is pass the key to MongooseDataloader.dataloader().

var userIdDataloader = userMongooseDataloader.dataloader('userId');

In this example, userIdDataloader can load data from the User collection, using userId parameters in userIdDataloader.load() or userIdDataloader.loadMany().

For more information on DataLoader functions and usage, please refer to https://github.com/graphql/dataloader#batch-function.

The code for userIdDataloader is roughly equivalent to the following:

var userIdDataloader = new DataLoader(ids =>
  this.userModel.find({ userId: { $in: ids } }).then(list => {
    var listByKey = _.keyBy(list, key);
    return ids.map(id => _.get(listByKey, id, null));
  }),
);

If you need another DataLoader that selects data from UserModel using a different key, e.g. _id, just pass _id instead of userId to userDataloader.dataloader().

var userPkDataloader = userDataloader.dataloader('_id');

If you want to keep the code simple as possible, you can chain everything in a single line of code:

var userIdDataloader = dataloaderFactory.mongooseLoader(UserModel).dataloader('userId');

Step 3 : Just load it

just call load() or loadMany() just like you use the original DataLoader.

var userIds = ['John', 'Min', 'Lark'];
userIdDataloader.load(userIds).then(user => console.log(user.name));

Use With

Apollo Server

graphql-dataloader-mongoose integrates well with Apollo Server. To use with Apollo Server, pass a MongooseDataLoaderFactory instance to the Apollo context when you initialize ApolloServer.

⚠️ You must pass a new MongooseDataloaderFactory() to the context function in the configuration parameters for ApolloServer, because a new DataLoader should be created in every HTTP request. (See Caveats)

var apolloServer = new ApolloServer( {
  schema: yourSchema,
  context: async ctx => {
    var dataloaderFactory = new MongooseDataloaderFactory();
    return { ...ctx, dataloaderFactory };
  },
})

Then, in the resolver function, you can use the MongooseDataLoaderFactory instance assigned in Apollo context:

Query: {
  resolveUserById(parent, param, context) {
    var userIds = param.userIds;
    var dataloaderFactory = context.dataloaderFactory;
    var userIdDataloader = dataloaderFactory.mongooseLoader(userModel).dataloader('userId');

    return userIdDataloader.loadMany(userIds);    
  }
}

TypeScript

graphql-dataloader-mongoose is a TypeScript-based library. Projects using TypeScript can easily incorporate it into their existing type system.

For example, suppose UserModel has IUserModel as an interface.

interface IUser {
  userId: string;
  name: string;
}

interface IUserModel extends IUser, Document {}

const UserModel = mongoose.model<IUserModel>(
  'User',
  new Schema({ userId: String, name: String }),
);

You can create a DataLoader by passing the interface, a la dataloaderFactory.mongooseLoader<IUserModel>.

const userId = 'John';
const dataloaderFactory = new MongooseDataloaderFactory();

// assign IUserModel interface in mongooseLoader function generic type
const userIdDataloader = dataloaderFactory
  .mongooseLoader<IUserModel>(userModel)
  .dataloader('userId');

// able to typecheck user model attribute (name, userId ..)
const user = userIdDataloader.load(userId);

Caveats

Creating a DataLoader per request

You must always create a new MongooseDataloaderFactory() in every request. It is insufficient to set an instance as a global variable. Pleas refer to https://github.com/graphql/dataloader#creating-a-new-dataloader-per-request for more details.

Available query types

Currently, graphql-dataloader-mongoose only supports finding by key (find( key : { $in : ids}}) Support for other queries will be added soon.

License

MIT License

Copyright (c) 2019-present NAVER Corp.

Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy
of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal
in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights
to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell
copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is
furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:

The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in
all copies or substantial portions of the Software.

THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE
AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER
LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM,
OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN
THE SOFTWARE.